12-year-old Dartmouth girl grows milkweed plants to help monarch butterflies - Action News
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Nova Scotia

12-year-old Dartmouth girl grows milkweed plants to help monarch butterflies

Vanessa Burchill is growing and giving away hundreds of swamp milkweed seedlings so endangered monarch butterflies have somewhere safe to land and lay their eggs.

'We can't survive without pollinators and if no one does anything to help them then we can't help ourselves'

Vanessa Burchill is on a mission to save monarch butterflies

3 years ago
Duration 2:27
The 12-year-old girl from Dartmouth, N.S, is growing hundreds of swamp milkweed plants and giving them away so the Halifax region becomes more welcoming to endangered monarch butterflies.

A 12-year-old Dartmouth, N.S., girl is growing and giving away hundreds of milkweed plantsso endangered monarch butterflies have somewhere safe to land.

Vanessa Burchill's quest to save the pollinators began about three years ago when her aunt showed her a chrysalis from her garden. She watched in wonder as a butterfly emerged and shook its wings dry.

She's now distributedroughly 1,000 swamp milkweed seedlings to people in the Halifax region through herDowntown Dartmouth Monarch Project. Her first batch this spring went in a matter of hours.

"It's very nice to see people who want to try and help the monarchs as well, and to know that it's not just us and a couple other people. It's quite a few people," Burchill told CBC Radio's Information Morning recently.

Why monarchs need milkweed

Monarch butterflies can't survive without milkweed because it's the only plant where they can lay their eggs.

Burchill grows swamp milkweed. It isfar less unruly thancommon milkweed, its cousin.

Common milkweedis considered anoxious weed in Nova Scotia. People aren't supposed to plant it and it often gets sprayed with pesticides, which can be harmful to the butterflies.

This year, Burchill's growing season beganin February with seeds from the Mersey Tobeatic Research Institute.

She nurturesthe cropinside at first under a three-tiered grow lamp she boughtafter receiving a grant from her local councillor.

As the weather warms up, she moves the delicate seedlings outside onto two vertical greenhouses on her back deck.

Once the plants start growing, Burchill moves the milkweed outside so they can get lots of sun. (Emma Smith/CBC)

"Once you get the hang of it, they're pretty easy and fun to grow because once they sprout they grow really, really fast," Burchill said during an interview last summer.

Anyone can message her on Facebook to pick up a pot of milkweed for free from her front stoop. Each pot has four small plants that people are encouraged to put in a sunny spot at the edge of their gardens.

"When the monarchs finally emerge from the chrysalis they need to be able to dry out their wings in the sun and when the plant doesn't have full sun they can't do that," Burchillsaid.

Project sprouts communitypollinator garden

In addition to growing several milkweed plants, Burchill'sfront and back yard are teeming withthistles, daisies and lilac bushes. Her pollinator-friendly garden is home to hummingbirds, salamanders and a family of starlings that recently took up residence.

"Me and my brother built a big birdhouse last year ... and I think the starling babies have just hatched," Burchill said. "You can hear them screaming all the time."

Neighbours and strangers can pick up pots of milkweed from her front stoop. (Emma Smith/CBC)

In 2019, Burchill's mom applied to have the family's yard certified by the Canadian Wildlife Federation as a wildlife friendly habitat.

"She didn't tell me about it when she did it because she didn't want me to feel sad if we got rejected, but we got it and then she surprised me with it," Burchill said.

Burchill has also started growing a community pollinator garden in the park across the street from her house with the help ofneighbours.

Burchill and her neighbours are also growing lots of milkweed in a pollinator garden they created in a nearby park. (Emma Smith/CBC)

"[We're] very proud of her and she's quite devoted to it," saidher dad Nick Burchill.

"Hopefully, it will create a nice, sustainable pathway for monarchs."

Burchill hasonly seen a handful ofmonarchsvisither own yard and she'sstill waiting to spot a caterpillar chomping on the milkweed.

But she knows her efforts are paying off when she sees the endangered species visiting gardens she helped grow.

"We can't survive without pollinators and if no one does anything to help themthen we can't help ourselves."

Nick Burchill says he's proud of his daughter's dedication to helping the endangered species survive. (Emma Smith/CBC)

With files from CBC Radio's Information Morning